GIS DATA INPUT USING SCANNERS AND DIGITIZERS Charles Redd & Nathan Miller

advertisement

GIS DATA INPUT USING

SCANNERS AND

DIGITIZERS

Charles Redd & Nathan Miller

4/12/2020 1

4/12/2020

First Some History

2

The Beginning ?

 GIS was born in Canada in the 1960’s to manage Canada’s large natural resources.

 The success of the merger of computers, database, and mapmaking was a big success.

4/12/2020 3

Did GIS Make 2,500 plus Years of

Documents & Mapmaking

Suddenly Obsolete ?

From cave paintings to satellite images

4/12/2020 4

Hard Copy Data with GIS

Significance

• Maps

• Aerial Photos

• Tables of spatial information (coordinates)

• Tables of Non-spatial information attributes

• Engineering and Architectural plans

• Land and Geological Surveys

• Caveman Drawings? Maybe

4/12/2020 5

How can we use pre-GIS data and non-digital data in our GIS

• Digitize existing graphical information!

– Some of the first methods to digitize graphical information involved overlaying the map with a grid marked on a clear sheet of Mylar.

Information that was within each grid was visually observed and entered by keyboard into the GIS.

• Attribute data from existing tables was hand entered.

• There must be a better way!

4/12/2020 6

Manual Digitizing ?

The majority of spatial data entered into a

GIS is from manual digitizing.

4/12/2020 7

Manual Digitizing

• The digitizing tablet and table allow information to be traced from an existing map or graphic.

• Three different types of tables or tablets exist.

– (1) Acoustic – the digitizing pen emits a high frequency sound that is received by microphones at the corners of the work area, triangulation is used to calculate the x and y coordinate of the pen.

4/12/2020 8

GTCO CalComp Sonic Digitizer

4/12/2020 9

Types of Digitizers

(Continued)

• (2) Resistivity uses two charged pads separated by a thin air gap, x and y coordinates are determined when the pads make contact.

• (3) The most widely used in large scale digitizers is the electronic digitizing tablet.

Embedded below the surface of the table or the tablet is a grid of wires that measure the strength of the signal from the puck or the pen

4/12/2020 10

Qualities of a Digitizer

– Stability

• The ability of the digitizer to maintain a value as the puck remains in one place.

– Repeatability

• Precision

• Good digitizers accurate to 0.001 inch

4/12/2020 11

Qualities of a Digitizer #2

– Linearity

• the ability to be within a specified distance of the correct value

• Good digitizers are able to have a linearity of 0.003 inch over 60 inches

– Skew

• The ability to produce coordinates in a true rectangle.

4/12/2020 12

Digitizing Procedures

• The Map is fixed to the digitizing table.

• Three or more control points are digitized.

– Easily identified points (intersections of major streets, major peaks, points on coastline)

– These coordinates will be known or verified

– The digitizing area is registered to the map area.

• Digitizing the map can be done in two ways.

– In point mode , the operator identifies the points captured explicitly by pressing a button.

– In stream mode the points are captured at regular intervals (time or distance)

4/12/2020 13

Digitizing Procedures (cont)

• Point mode is done subjectively by the operator (no two operators will digitize the same).

• Stream mode generates a large number of points, many of which will be redundant.

• Most digitizing is done in point mode.

4/12/2020 14

Advantages of Digitizing

• Low initial capital cost

• Flexible and adapts to different types of data

• Easily mastered skill

• Digitizing devices are reliable

• Generally the quality of data is high

4/12/2020 15

• Altek

• Calcomp

• Didger

• GTCO

• Kurta

Digitizing Vendors

4/12/2020 16

Problems with Digitizing

• Paper maps are unstable, they stretch or shrink, sometimes while they are on the digitizing table.

• The accuracy depends on the dedication of the operator and his training and skill.

• Accuracy also depends on the quality of the source documents.

• Paper maps weren’t prepared “digitally” correct, but to visually impart information, for example if railroads, highways and tunnels pass through a mountain pass the pass may be drawn larger to accommodate the drawing.

4/12/2020 17

Scanning Technology

• Converts paper maps into digital format by capturing features as cells, or pixels.

• Cells are captured using a scanner head made up of photosensitive cells.

• Advanced large format scanners have heads with 8000 photosensitive cells

• Each sensor is able to record a pixel rated between 0 (black) to 255 (white) and any graytones between.

4/12/2020 18

Color Scanning Technology

• Color images use the same technique but the image is scanned for red, blue and green.

• Older scanners required the image being scanned to pass the scanning head in three passes.

• Vectorization often requires color scanning

4/12/2020 19

Color Scanning Technology

• Filters allow the head to pass the image once scanning all three colors at once

• The latest technology: full width, single line, sensor array scanning uses a line of

LED’s which capture the image

• LED scanners can create images using

16.8 million colors at speeds several times faster than previously obtained.

4/12/2020 20

Scanning Problems

• Higher resolutions aren’t always the answer to better data; often the additional “noise” and resulting clean up of data can cause higher resolution to not be the best solution, a balance between detail and additional manual clean-up must be struck.

• Paper maps are not “dimensionally stable” and a great deal of variation occurs as the maps age.

• Documents must be clean (no smudges or extra marks or lines).

4/12/2020 21

Scanning Problems #2

• Text may accidentally be scanned as line features in automatic feature recognition.

• Specialized symbols (for example marsh or asphalt) may not be detected as such.

4/12/2020 22

IDEAL

Large Format

Monochrome Scanners

Model

FSS 4300DSP

FSS 8300DSP

FSS 12300DSP

FSS 18300DSP

Super Wide 2250

Super Wide 2251

Price

$6,675

$10,425

$11,925

$13,425

$13,425

$14,925 max dpi

Paper

Size Speed

200 36 in.

15 sec.

800 36 in.

17 sec.@200 dpi

1200

1800

36 in.

36 in.

25 sec.@200 dpi

34 sec.@200 dpi

400 50 in.

3 in./sec.

800 50 in.

6 in./sec

4/12/2020 23

Model

ANAtech

Binary & Grayscale Scanners

Price

Evolution 4 $10,000

Evolution 8

Evolution Pro

High Resolution

Monochrome Scanners

1270 Digidot

Eagle 4225

$11,000

$12,500

$50,000

$55,000 max dpi

Paper

Size Speed

400 36 in.

800 36 in.

800 36 in.

3"/sec @

200 dpi

3"/sec @

200 dpi

6.4"/sec @

200 dpi

1270 27 in.

Unknown

2540 42 in.

Unknown

4/12/2020 24

Model

Large Format

Color

Scanners

Price

ESC 5010 DSP $11,175

FSC 8010 DSP

Large Format

Color

Scanners

Colortrac

5480

Eagle 6250C

$14,925

$31,000

$142,000

4/12/2020 max dpi

Paper

Size Speed

500 36 in.

800 36 in.

36 sec.@200 dpi

48 sec.@200 dpi

800 54 in.

1000 62 in.

1.5"/sec. @

200dpi

Unknown

25

Vendors for Scanners

• Widecom Scanners

– www.widecom.com/

• Anatech Scanners

– www.anatech.com/

• Vidar Systems Corporation

– www.delinfotek.com/

• Abakos Digital Images

– www.abakos.com.au/

• Contex Scanning Technologies

– www.caddcentreindia.com/

4/12/2020 26

Digitizer or Scanner

• Scanners

– Speed and ease

– Raster data without intelligence; manual or automatic vectorisation possible.

– Usually produces large files that need compression

– Hardware is expensive

• Digitizers

– Labor intensive

– Requires skilled operator

– Vector (intelligent) data

– Labor intensive

– Hardware less expensive

4/12/2020 27

Scanning & Digitizing Input Errors

• Incompleteness of the spatial data; missing points, line segments, and polygons.

• Location placement errors of spatial data; careless digitizing or poor quality of the original source.

• Distortion of spatial data; base maps that aren’t scale correct over the entire image or from material stretch in paper maps.

4/12/2020 28

Scanning & Digitizing Input Errors

#2

• Incorrect linkage between spatial and attribute data; misplaced labels or unique identifiers being assigned during manual key entry or during the initial setup.

• Attribute data is wrong or incomplete; missing data records or data records from different time periods.

• Redundant information, including vertices, text, nodes, and arcs.

• Incorrect label information and placement.

4/12/2020 29

Common Spatial Errors

• Slivers or gaps in the line work.

• Dead ends, dangling arcs, overshoots and undershoots.

• Bow ties or weird polygons caused by inappropriate closings of connecting features.

4/12/2020 30

Data Verification

• Visual review; usually done by reviewing a check plot (hard copy).

• Cleanup of lines and junctions; this process is usually done by software and then through manual editing.

• Check source maps, if additional copies of the same map are available compare them to see if stretching of the map has occurred.

• Check output drawing to see if text or symbols were read as features if software is used to convert the drawings.

4/12/2020 31

Examples of Scanned and

Aerial images

4/12/2020 32

Paris 1640

4/12/2020 33

Paris 2000

4/12/2020 34

Notre Dame

4/12/2020 35

Summary of Presentation or….

Things I Learned Preparing this

Report

• Scanning while initially faster may not be the fastest solution for your data input.

• Source information needs to be carefully assessed before a method of data conversion is selected.

• The skill and motivation of staff should be evaluated before a method is selected.

4/12/2020 36

Summary of Presentation or….

Things I Learned Preparing this

Report #2

• Acoustic or Sonic Digitizers Exist

• Digitizing can be as accurate as .001 of an inch

• Color scanners are needed for automatic vectorization

4/12/2020 37

One Eagle 6250C Color Scanner

Costs more than two Dodge Vipers

Scanner $142,000

Two Vipers @ $69,225

= $138,450

38 4/12/2020

Download